Who's Got the Action? (1962) Poster

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6/10
"I've Got the horse right here...................."
bkoganbing30 October 2005
You know if this were a serious film, Lana Turner would have hustled off Dean Martin to Gamblers Anonymous and that would be the end of it. But movie comedy demands a crazy scheme as a premise.

In a scheme worthy of Lucy Ricardo, Lana decides to take over Dino's action. She enlists his lecherous law partner Eddie Albert in on it. Albert pretends that he's got a new bookie who's the best in town. Martin goes for it.

Of course the idea is based on the fact that Dino will lose, but the money will then stay in the family. Instead Dino gets on a hot streak causing all kinds of unforeseen complications.

Who's Got the Action has a cast full of familiar faces doing what they do best. I suppose tops in the supporting cast is Walter Matthau, playing big time bookie who's wondering who's the new competition in town stealing the action from a mounting list of his heaviest bettors.

Not the best that either lead has ever done, but still fine entertainment.
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5/10
They try....
planktonrules27 January 2023
"Who's Got the Action" is a forgettable time-passer. I wasn't totally surprised, as the film starred Lana Turner...and by 1962 the quality of her films had diminished considerably. I was surprised, however, to see a major star at the time, Dean Martin, in such a slight film.

Martin plays a husband who loves to gamble on the horses. He's not very good at it and the wife wants to teach him a bizarre lesson...she sets herself up as a bookie for him because she KNOWS he'll lose a lot of money. The problem is that he starts winning big...and others notice and join him in betting with this mystery bookie. Soon, real gangsters are noticing they're losing clients and they are NOT happy.

The film is supposed to be a comedy but there really weren't many laughs. Add to that one of Walter Matthau's worst performances and you've got a movie that should have been better but wasn't.
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4/10
Calling Damon Runyeon!
mark.waltz21 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
There are some genuine laughs in this comedy that first appears to be another Doris Day/Rock Hudson type sex comedy but ends up being anything but. Notice I say "some" laughs, not a lot. The non-sensical plot deals with a novelist wife (Lana Turner) of an attorney (Dean Martin) with an addiction to betting on horse races. She decides to teach her husband a lesson so she can win him away from his obsession, and for some odd reason (seemingly to put him on a loosing streak), becomes a bookie herself. This brings in involvement from the mob and two judges (Paul Ford and John McGiver) who are associates of Martin's. To get her scheme rolling, Turner utilizes the assistance of her husband's lecherous partner (Eddie Albert) and the sexy next door neighbor (Nita Talbot) who just happens to be the gangster's moll! He is played by none other than Walter Matthau in another one of his early mob roles, and if there is any indication that he was a reincarnation of 30's character actor Ned Sparks, this movie is it. Martin spends a lot of the film intoxicated (indicating another problem), while Turner seems to be out of sorts with this type of comedy, as if she was a last minute replacement for Kim Novak. It is the character performers who end up the most interesting, and they also include Jack Albertson and Ned Glass (Doc in "West Side Story"). Albert's real-life wife, Margo (looking a lot like Ethel Merman!), plays the nosy Latin maid, and overdoes her imitation of Lupe Velez. The film, new on DVD, features some beautiful Technicolor photography and an ironic twist at the end that makes the ridiculous plot line palatable. Talbot, a much underrated comic, steals every scene she is in, while Ford and MacGiver are as always lovable buffoons.
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Manages to get out of the starting gate, if not all the way to a photo-finish!
gregcouture18 May 2003
This one isn't all that bad...really! Dean Martin was well-cast as a guy whose gambling addiction causes his wife, played by Lana Turner, to concoct a scheme to keep him out of debt by secretly becoming his "bookie." Trouble is, he hits a winning streak and she has to sell off jewelry, furnishings and other baubles to pay off his windfall. Before Walter Matthau became a major name-above-the-title headliner, he played "Tony Gagoots," big-time bookie with an elaborately concealed electronic control room for his illegal empire, and he's partnered with Nita Talbot, as his main squeeze, "Saturday Knight," and she's one of this film's comic highlights. There are also Eddie Albert and his wife, Margo, on hand to lend amusing and very professional support and the whole thing is prettily mounted in Panavision (which means that the VHS version is probably "formatted" - not a plus!) and Technicolor. It's an early-Sixties example of what TIME magazine, in a fairly positive review, called a "yak derby" and, if you're a fan of those two always-funny character actors, Paul Ford and John McGiver, they have a few moments in this one that lend to the proceedings some genuinely winning laughs.
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2/10
Promised so much, delivered so little
melnar128 August 2014
I'm a big fan of Dean Martin - even after his split from Jerry Lewis. I really thought I was going to enjoy this movie, but was I disappointed… This is probably one of the most forgotten of Dean Martin's movies. It deserves to be, because it's so forgettable. Hardly anything sticks in the memory after having watched it. No funny lines, no hummable music or songs.

This movie might have been saved by the great character actors who were in it. Walter Matthau, Eddie Albert, Nita Talbot, John McGiver, Paul Ford, Ned Glass – I love them all. Well, great they certainly were, but not in this movie.

The problems were the asinine story/script, sore lack of humorous dialogue, totally unbelievable character types, lackluster direction.

Just about the only praiseworthy thing about the movie was the excellent color photography.

For anyone like me, who doesn't particularly like stories about betting on the horses (unless it's something by Damon Runyon), it will surely add up to one big yawn.
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6/10
Doesn't hit the bullseye but decent fun with a great cast
Marco_Trevisiol22 January 2023
One of Dean Martin's least-known films and while not a total success, it's fairly enjoyable.

The initial scenes feel like a fairly conventional romantic comedy but once Turner's plan to be Martin's secret bookie gets into full motion, it becomes a full blown farce.

And as a farce, it's a pretty good one. It develops some fine momentum with running gags (like the car collision scene or whenever Jack Albertson's policeman character appears) and revelling in the consequences and complications of when Turner's plan gets out of hand.

Alas, when the film tries to wrap up its convoluted goings on, it runs out of steam and the final 15-20 minutes are fairly cumbersome and unfunny.

The cast is stacked with talented performers; perhaps too stacked as several are underused. For example, Eddie Albert as Martin's friend and work colleague is funny and amusing but because of the plot goes missing for long stretches in the film's second half.

The one weakness in the cast is Lana Turner, someone who I never found to be a particularly interesting performer. She is competent in her role but doesn't have the same comedic mindset as the rest of the cast and as a result her character is easily the dullest in the film.

So while not what it could've been, this film is an amusing timewaster. It's certainly better than a lot of other films Martin made in the 1960s.
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7/10
Dean Martin, Lana Turner and the rest of the cast of Who's Got the Action make it passable entertainment
tavm14 April 2021
Dean Martin, Lana Turner, Eddie Albert, Paul Ford, John McGiver, and Walter Matthau star in this pretty funny movie about gambling, the mob, and horse races. Mom was confused by the plot and while part of me was too, I managed to laugh at many of the visual and verbal gags and characterizations that abounded. Especially seeing Matthau do some of his familiar deliveries brought a smile to my face. In other words, Who's Got the Action was enjoyable passable entertainment.
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7/10
A good film that needed some punch in the script
vincentlynch-moonoi20 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
First off, the transfer by Olive Films. Well, it's decent, although I purchased the Blu-Ray version, and to me it looks more like a normal version. But, still, thanks Olive Films for some of the films you are putting out! This film was toward the end of Lana Turner's career, although she was only 41 years old...and she looks 41 years old. The only really good film she had left in her after this was "Madame X", 4 years hence. On the other hand, although Dean Martin was 45 years old, he was just approaching his golden years on television and recordings. Unfortunately, his recent success in pictures ("Rio Bravo", "Bells Are Ringing") was already making him just a tad lazy. But, he had lots of hit movie years left when he made this.

Here, Dino has a bad gambling habit that is beginning to affect his marriage, although Lana initially suspects he is having an affair. When she learns about the gambling, she talks Dean's law partner (Eddie Albert) into helping her get involved in gambling -- as a pretend bookie -- in a convoluted plot to lead Dean to losing enough money to drive him away from gambling. Instead, he begins winning! Then the winning, by Dean and friends, gets out of hand and a syndicate mobster (Walter Matthau) attempts to find out who is getting the action (hence the title).

There's nothing wrong with this movie that a better director or script wouldn't have fixed. It's okay. Very watchable, but not memorable. Why? Dean was Dean...that's why so many of us went to see Dean Martin movies. Lana Turner was still lovely, though middle-aged. That's okay, too. Eddie Albert was a little disappointing...far from some of his stellar supporting actor roles. Walter Matthau in his pre-stardom days was what Walter Matthau usually was at that point in time. Paul Ford and John McGiver did their job as judges well (were there any romantic comedies during this period that John McGiver wasn't in?). But, the script was missing some punch, and considering we're talking about horse racing and the mob, it certainly could have had some.

Watch it once. Enjoy some good moments. And then move on.
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8/10
Fun Lana/Dean Action Picture
JLRMovieReviews26 March 2009
Wouldn't you know it? Dean Martin has a gambling problem, or at least his wife Lana Turner thinks so, in this relatively unknown but worthwhile movie. This Lana/Dean teaming is an hilarious hoot to watch. While it may seem a bit incredible to believe, if you just sit back and relax, you'll find plenty of laughs. With a great cast featuring Walter Matthau, Paul Ford, Eddie Albert, Eddie's wife in real life Margo, as the maid, and Nita Talbot as Lana's next door neighbor with great taste in decorating. Dean's presence gives the film the why-do-I-care-about-anything feel to it, and Lana's misadventures make for chaos in this madcap tale of betting on the right horse!
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slide into sitcom
irearly7 June 2023
This is an example of what Hollywood was doing, or becoming, in the 60s. Basically television.

The opening scenes of this motion picture were bizarrely generic. A middle aged couple leaves an apartment building for a cab ride to a restaurant all of which plays under the opening credits. It's dialogue-free and the couple turns out to be Dean Martin and a matronly Lana Turner. The silly nothings continue as Dean is interrupted, continually, by phone calls from (his bookie?) and his romantic date, with his wife, goes down the... I don't know this is where I bailed.

Hollywood was trying to squeeze the last drop of revenue from existing resources (sound stages, big name stars and supporting actors, technical and administrative support). I didn't recognize Lana Turner even after she started talking. Never a big fan but aware of her work. The middle-aged Turner was not instantly recognizable, like Joan Crawford or Bette Davis or more recently Jane Fonda or Helen Mirren. This was essentially a domestic sit-com with lies, misapprehensions and bizarre inferences (no doubt) throughout. Supporting cast upholds the resource theory: mostly contract support players from the 40s and 50s.

Post-war Hollywood was teeming with "guys" who could write this stuff, with experience dating back to the 30s, and endless reserves of pretty people who could sell the same old three-act formula ad infinitum, hour-long for dramas, 30 minutes for comedies.

It went on through the 70s before new formats began to emerge in the evolution of what we now call long-form serial entertainment. So this movie? Blech.
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Horse races at a tortoise pace.
dbdumonteil12 May 2002
Listless little comedy which drags on and on for an hour and a half.Lana Turner,one of the queens of melodrama -"The bad and the beautiful","Madame X","Peyton Place",the sublime "imitation of life"- or film noir ("the postman always rings twice") has not the great comical presence the part asks for.Walter Matthau steals the show:ahead of his time,his character uses a big computer;although a dirty man,he lectures his subordinate about his poor old mother,whom he must support even at his own expense.

A distant relative of "the sting" .People who are allergic to bets,bookies and stuff like that ,take to your heels.
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